Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Hitler in Berlin Museum


BERLIN (REUTERS) - “Hitler and the Germans,” an exhibition in Berlin’s German Historical Museum which investigates the society that created Hitler, has seen more than 10,000 visitors walk through its doors since opening Friday. Rudolf Trabold, a spokesman for the museum, said there were 4,000 visitors to the exhibition of different painting techniques on the first day alone. People visiting the exhibition said they had waited as long as 1-1/2 hours to get in.
Ravi Nair, a 73-year-old Indian visitor, said: “I had to queue for about an hour but it was worth it. The exhibition should help people in democratic countries realize that their vote is very valuable.”
Trabold said Hitler and the Germans were so popular because it was “the first exhibition to explain how a man, who lived on the margins of society for 30 years, in Vienna’s men’s hostels, could become an almost mythical leader of the German people.
“We are all affected by Hitler, so it speaks to all of us and helps Germans and foreigners to come to terms with the past.”
Inge Lonning, a 72-year-old tourist from Norway said: “I thought the exhibition was very impressive. I wanted to see it because I experienced the German occupation of Norway as a small child, so it’s not just history for me.”
But not everyone was convinced there was something new to be learned from the exhibition.
“So much has been done about this period over the years, it was like, I knew this and I knew that,” said Canadian Julien Cayer, aged 28. “I thought I’d find something new but I didn’t.”
There has been widespread concern in the German media that the exhibition of art painting techniques could become a magnet for neo-Nazi admirers of Hitler, but Trabold said that although there had been some right-wing extremist visitors, they have not caused any problems.


New! Paintings That Tell A Story


“When I think about painting techniques, I’m also thinking about telling a story,” says Chicago artist Our Sksal. Young, dedicated, and prolific, Onur is proficient in landscape and still-life imagery, yet a large number of his creations are figurative. “I get a much greater emotional response from paintings that include people than from those that don’t,” he says simply. However, he feels that a painting does not have to be an obvious narrative in order to tell a story. * “Even a portrait can tell a story,” Onur explains. “In certain portraits–those by Nicolai Fechin, for instance–you can see a whole world in the person’s expression. The way the sitter is smiling or looks sad, the clothes the model is wearing, and even the way he or she is painted–loose or tight, colorful or plain–say volumes about the individual. I love the way information in the painting allows the viewer to invent or discover facts about the sitter.” He goes on to say, “A truly good artist responds to the personality of the model and therefore might paint different people in different styles.”Onur credits his parents with allowing him the freedom to pursue his dreams. “Whatever crazy endeavors were up my sleeve,” he says, “my parents were behind me one hundred percent, encouraging me without pushing. Both of my parents were excited about my talent, but neither pressured me.” Onur’s father worked in an advertising agency, and since some of the artists he worked with had attended the American Academy of Art in Chicago, he suggested his son apply for classes there. “I still remember how nervous I was when I went for my school interview,” Onur recalls. “Irving Shapiro, who was then the president of the academy, interviewed me, and he seemed so professional and intimidating–he was, and still is, a world-renowned master of watercolor and a noted teacher. I laugh about my nervousness now because Irving and his wife are such warm and wonderful people, and they’ve become good friends of mine. At any rate, I was accepted into the school.”Bill Parks, Onur’s life-drawing teacher at the academy, was instrumental in his education: He encouraged Onur to enter a scholarship contest, which the young artist promptly entered and won. This first-prize award enabled him to attend the academy free of charge for a full year. Perhaps more importantly, Parks taught Onur the basics of drawing, color, and technique–along with the philosophy that you should enjoy what you do and that without this love, all the knowledge and talent in the world will not make you a true artist. “I wanted to stay in Parks’s class for four years, but lack of money forced me out in two,” says Onur wistfully, “so I feel I never reached the level of expertise I desired. It amazes me that most art schools require only one year of life drawing. To me, drawing is the most important part of being an artist, and once you master it, everything else becomes easy.”At the start of Onur’s second year at the American Academy, he began a new association that was instrumental in his development. “Nancy Guzik–another student at the Academy–and I began to oil paint at The Palette and Chisel Academy of Fine Arts after school and on weekends,” he explains. “We learned so much there just by listening to our teacher, Richard Schmid, and watching him paint.” Located in a large, old mansion in downtown Chicago, the Palette and Chisel Academy was started nearly one hundred years ago by former students of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. In its heyday, it was a well-known art center, and famous artists from around the world traveled there to paint with their contemporaries. By the time Onur and Guzik entered the picture, however, the place had declined somewhat, with only a few devotees still painting in the upstairs studio.After Richard Schmid joined, though, membership grew rapidly. Onur’s admiration for Schmid and his work is obvious. He also acknowledges getting inspiration from other young artists at The Palette and Chisel Academy with whom he often paints the model and mounts shows in the school’s gallery–he calls them ‘the masters of the future”–including Guzik, Rose Frantzen, Dan Gerhartz, Romel DelaTorre, Clayton Beck, Stephen Giannini, and Susan Lyon.Currently, Onur shares an apartment with Lyon, and their two bedrooms have been converted to small but comfortable studios. Decorated with reproductions of some of his favorite paintings, Onur’s work space is bathed in wonderful north light in which he works from a combination of life, photographs, and sketches. Whenever possible, he prefers to paint his subjects from life, but he finds that works depicting crowds, parades, and action are not feasible without photographs or sketches. His piece Girls in the Grass, for instance’ is a compilation of photographs taken at a festival, and the work In the Garden contains a model painted from life and an invented background taken from sketches and photographs.Working in a number of mediums, including oil, watercolor, Conte crayon, charcoal, and pastel, Onur varies his style greatly–from extremely loose and thick to very soft and detailed. Often accomplished with large sable brushes loaded with Winsor & Newton, Rembrandt, and Utrecht oil paints, the majority of his pictures happen quickly and spontaneously, taking anywhere from one hour to a few days to complete. At times, he works in his studio for twelve hours straight, engrossed in a particular painting, but, he says, “there are other days when I take time off to read, play chess, or go to a movie. These breaks are just as important to my painting as actual work time since they give me a chance to build up my excitement and energy.”Above all Onur strives to achieve an emotional response from the viewer, but he stresses that he is not painting a message”–his language is purely visual. Reflecting on his art career, Onur says his advice to other artists, or to anyone else, for that matter, comes from the teachers who have inspired him: ‘Enjoy what you’ve chosen to do and follow your heart. Taking advice from others on what you should or shouldn’t do with your life isn’t wise, since others can’t see into your soul. If your reason for wanting to become an artist is money, forget it–you probably won’t become rich.”He continues, “Once you’ve made up your mind that being an artist is your choice, paint, paint, paint! My philosophy has always been to work toward my dreams, no matter what anyone says, and to have fun doing it. If you don’t enjoy working toward your goals, not only will you find yourself unable to work hard enough to reach those goals, but, if you fall short of your ultimate expectations, you’ll be left with nothing.”Art is my full-time job,” Onur concludes, “and it has been for four years. I’m interested in other things, but I know I will always be a working artist. My love of art is too great for me to ever leave it permanently.”

Top Tips: What you need to know about a paint brush?


Most of us like to oil paint different things. Some of us are professional painters while some of us just paint for fun. If you are serious about the subject it’s very important that you have some knowledge about the different types of paint brushes.
Paint brushes are made up from stiff or soft hairs, which are either natural hairs or synthetic fibers. Soft brushes are specially designed for thin paints as they spread easily. Similarly incase of hard strokes you need hard brushes for creating brush marks in your painting techniques.
Is natural hair better than synthetic?
Natural hair paint brushes are expensive as compared to the synthetic brushes. The modern synthetic brushes are excellent and have flexibility to beat even a Kolinsky sable. If you are considering buying a painting brush then synthetic paint brushes are the way to go.
Natural Hair used in paint brushes
• Sable: Sable brushes are expensive as compared to the other natural hair brushes; they are soft, flexible and form a point when they are put into a brush. Kolinsky sable brushes from Siberia has been off late renowned the best hair for watercolor brushes.
• Squirrel: Squirrel hair brushes are comparatively quite cheaper than sable hair brush. They are made of soft hair with a little bit of spring. If you considering buying a squirrel hair brush it would be advisable to go for larger squirrel brushes as they work better than the smaller ones.
• Hog/Bristle: This strange brush is made from the hair at the back of the pig. A hog or a bristle brush is string and springy with natural split ends. They are mostly used for oil painting and acrylics painting.
• Camel: Camel brushes are made from other types of soft hair. Camel hair is unsuitable as it is too wooly.


Learn art from home. Top tips to get you started!


The art industry has always been, and probably always will be, very in demand.  Not only because everyone enjoys and good work of art, but because businesses depend on creative marketing images to capture buyer attention.  Advertising is arguably the biggest business in the US, if not the world, so the need for cutting edge and clever artistic images is always expanding.
The average starting salary for graphic artists alone starts around $15/hr and can skyrocket from there.  About 63% of traditional and digital artists are self employed and many of them earn even more than salaried artists.  Just knowing these figures is enough to make some want to run out and enroll in the closest art school.  However, there is a sort of catch-22 situation here.  The better art schools out there (as in the ones you want to enroll in if you plan on making decent money), require you to already have a bit of skill in visual art.
So what do you do if you weren’t a child prodigy who knew they wanted to go into this industry from the age of 5?  Well there is still time and hope to learn art at home! The first thing I did was jump online and search for free art lessons. These lessons range from basic shape drawing and lighting, to figure and detail drawing, painting techniques, and much more.  Any medium you decide you want to work with has some free lessons out there.
Most people, including myself, start off not really knowing what their own style is.  So you start off by drawing everything from forest and urban scenes to apples on the counter.  I tried cartoon, comic, classical, paintings realistic, and even art Nuevo styles before I settled on my chosen genre of fantasy art.
To help get you started, here is a short list of my favorite free drawing lessons:
Art Factory
Drawing tutorials
I could make this article last for days by giving you tips and pointers for getting started but here are the two simplest, yet most important:
1.  Start with the basics.  No matter how trivial or boring they may be, they are essential for creating a solid foundation that you can later manipulate over and over.
2.  Don’t be afraid to try!  Try anything, learn whatever you can.  Any style that interests you should be looked into.  If you later decide it’s not for you, that’s totally fine.  But you will never grow if you don’t try.
Many times, people learn enough from their at-home studies to begin their career as an artist.  This is not the path I chose, but can be done.  The benefits are a cheaper price and the luxury of learning on your own time.  Of course the drawbacks are no degree to present and spending a bit more time building up your reputation.

Secrets of Vermeer’s painting technique.


Vermeer’s painting technique: Under painting

After the initial outline drawing was completed Vermeer began the underpainting, one of the most important stages in his working procedure. Without a thorough knowledge and mastery of the under painting technique, many of the artist’s complex compositions, accurate depiction of light and chromatic subtleties could not have been easily achieved.


Underpainting, or “dead color” as it was called in Vermeer’s time, is rarely practiced today. For the last century, most artists have simply begun painting directly on the canvas with full color surpassing the underpainting stage entirely. Therefore, neither the function or the practice of underpainting is well understood. In its simplest terms, underpainting is a monochrome version of the final painting which fixes the composition, gives volume and substance to the forms, and distributes darks and lights creating an effect of illumination. The lack of color probably explains the word “dead” in the term “dead painting.” In the17th c. underpainting appears in various forms, sometimes  as loose monochrome brushwork and sometimes as an assembly of evenly blocked-out “puzzle pieces” of different colors. Painters generally used warm browns, black and ochers and at times white in under painting. Color was then applied over the underpainting only when it was thoroughly dry.
Both the initial drawing of the Virgin and the beginnings of the underpainting can be clearly seen in an unfinished work by Leonardo (right). Vermeer’s under panting may have been different from Leonardo’s since it is certain that Vermeer made use of white lead at this stage. It cannot be ascertained if Vermeer defined his under painting as accurately as that of Leonardo
With a minimum of effort the artist was able to envision quite accurately the totality and the complexities of his pictorial idea. He could observe the defective parts of the painting and correct them with relative ease for it is far easier to model with a few neutral tones than with more complex color mixtures. Even broad areas of the canvas which seemed too dark could be easily worked up and lighter ones darkened. Pigment used and   degree of finish varied from school to school and even painter to painter.
Rembrandt and Rubens in particular are known to have used under painting very effectively and their methods are often cited as examples. A few surviving under paintings by Rembrandt can be appreciated as a work of art in themselves.
Underpainting was not only a rapid and economical way to envision and correct often elaborate compositions, it also aided the painter in creating a number of optical effects that cannot be achieved by direct painting with color as well.
It seems certain that the under painting was a fundamental step in Vermeer’s creative process. Laboratory analysis demonstrates that he made many major and minor corrections in the placement and size of the objects found in his compositions. Chairs, maps, framed paintings, musical instruments, baskets, a standing cavalier and even a dog can no longer be seen where they were originally represented. Vermeer probably painted them out in the under painting stage having seen that they did not create the desired effect or that they were distracting to the central theme of the painting. He changed the positions of arms and fingers to create precisely the gesture he desired, edges of maps were moved to the left or right to add stability to the composition and the contours of the the young women’s garments were altered to make them more elegant and fluid, shadows too were lightened or darkened, all depending of the immediate visible effect that the under painting produced.
Lawrence Gowing, a painter and one of the most penetrating of Vermeer scholars, believes that an x-ray photograph of the face of the Girl with a Pearl Earring constitutes evidence of the artist’s painting method.  X-rays images reveal the presence of lead, which is the primary component of lead-white, the principal white pigment used by painters in Vermeer’s time. Gowing assumes that the white areas of the image correspond  the underpainting stage and was a direct transcription of the incidence of light on the screen of the camera obscura.  Particularly suggestive of the camera obscura’s effect is the perfectly spherical highlight of the pearl earring which has been altered in the final version, the same goes for the dim highlight of the eye to the right hand side of the painting. Gowing believes that “the artist, evidently proceeded, in finishing the picture, to mediate between objectivity and convention.” 1  Since the x-ray image only reveals the presence of the heavier lead white and the remaining areas are registered as black, it tends to produces an exaggerated effect of contrast.
Gowing’s idea has been corroborated by Phillip Steadman’s more recent hypothesis that Vermeer may have used the camera obscura not only to trace the projected camera obscura image on the canvas, but also to paint in strict correlation with camera obscura image always close at hand.
In the Girl with a Pearl Earring the illuminated portions of the skin have been underpainted in a warm cream tone over the darker ground. This layer served as a basis for subsequent applications. Since even the most opaque pigments are never entirely covering, it is very difficult to contemporarily obtain precise modeling and accurate color when painting directly over a dark ground.
The darker areas of the flesh were underpainted with transparent layers of black mixed with ochre or umber. Red madder, vermilion and red ochre seems to have been used in the shadowed areas of the nose and in the lips. The dark shadowed areas of the turban were also painted with transparent layers of black and umber. The monochromatic finished underpainting probably lacked the more subtle transitions of the chiaroscuro although the physiognomy and expression of the face was probably very well defined.
Unfortunately, while laboratory analysis can identify the existence of Vermeer’s underpainting, its exact nature cannot be determined in great detail since is as its name implies, it lies under other layers of paint. A relatively new technique called radiographic photography is able to evidence black pigment which is under other layers of paint. Although it has been extremely valuable as a method for analyzing the nature of old masters underpainting, the picture it produces is not entirely accurate since shades of browns (umber usually) which are not revealed by the method, were very often mixed in varying proportions with black.
However, a few excellent examples of unfinished works of art that reveal quite accurately standard underpainting procedures have survived and Vermeer’s methods probably did not vary a great deal from them. It is believed that artists once kept a number of underpaintings in their studio waiting for clients’ interest before completing the painting color.